Black Rhino Auctioned for $350K in the Name of ConservationAn Animal Rights Article from All-Creatures.org

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Killing animals to save others sets a bad example and
a regrettable precedent and is not the way to foster peaceful coexistence.
When people say they kill animals because they love them this makes me feel
very uneasy. I'm glad they don't love me.

Texas hunting club says they sold the rhino to save other
rhinos and their homes...Should we kill in the name of conservation?
Individual animals are not disposable commodities

We live in a troubled and wounded world in which humans continue to
dominate and to relentlessly kill numerous nonhuman animals (animals).

A Texas hunting club recently auctioned off an endangered black rhino
purportedly to save other black rhinos and their homes in Namibia. The
Dallas Safari Club says, "Namibian wildlife officials will accompany the
auction winner through Mangetti National Park where the hunt will occur, 'to
ensure the correct type of animal is taken.'" This is not a very comforting
thought.

This sale, in which an animal is objectified and treated like a
disposable commodity, raises many questions about how we try to save other
species. One major question is, "Should we kill in the name of
conservation?" People disagree on what is permissible and what is not. My
take and that of compassionate conservation is this is not an acceptable
trade-off. (Please see "Ignoring Nature No More: Compassionate Conservation
at Work", Ignoring nature no more: The case for compassionate conservation,
and a Forbes interview for more on compassionate conservation.) The life of
every individual matters.

The world is in dire need of healing and we must revise some of the ways
in which we attempt to coexist with other animals. Some of these methods
center on heinous ways of killing them "in the name of conservation" or "to
foster coexistence". Compassionate conservation stresses that the life of
every individual matters and trading off an individual for the good of their
own or another species is not an acceptable way to save species. And, there
doesn't seem to be much evidence that it works in any significant way.

Black rhinos do indeed find themselves trying to avoid humans out to kill
them, but in Namibia only 10 rhinos have been killed since 2006. Of course,
this is 10 too many, but far fewer than have been killed in neighboring
South Africa where around 1000 were killed in 2012 alone.

"To destroy nature is not to conserve nature. To mount the head of a wild
animal in your trophy room is not conservation, it is repugnant."

The above quotation comes from an essay in examiner.com called "Must
conservation of wildlife including killing wildlife". It was based on a 60
Minutes report titled "Hunting animals to save them?" While it dealt with
wildlife ranches in Texas where people can pay a small fortune to kill
various animals in canned hunts, it does raise important questions about
killing in the name of conservation. Some other valuable snippets worth deep
consideration include:

"If we want to conserve a population of, for instance, people native to a
particular section of our country, would we kill a few to conserve the
others? Isn’t that saying the group is more important than the individual?
Isn’t it saying the individual gives up his or her rights to life because he
or she belongs to a particular group, a particular species?"

"Each life—human animal and nonhuman animal—is an individual with an
individual personality. Take a group of purebred puppies, for example—they
may all look the same but they aren’t. They are their own individual beings
with individual traits and personalities. Wildlife are individuals with
their own individual traits and personalities. To say one is more deserving
to live than another, in the name of conservation, bastardizes the word."

Killing animals to save others sets a bad example and a regrettable
precedent and is not the way to foster peaceful coexistence. When people say
they kill animals because they love them this makes me feel very uneasy. I'm
glad they don't love me.

Cruelty can't stand the spotlight and it is important that news about the
sorts of activities discussed above be widely disseminated and openly
discussed. That major media is covering them is a step in the right
direction.

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